ABSTRACT

As global demands grow for the restitution of looted artifacts from Western museums and ethnological collections, what about the displaced and sequestered moving-image heritage of the Global Majority? This book examines restitutive practices in audiovisual archives worldwide, addressing pressing practical questions with immediate policy implications. It explores legal frameworks, codes of conduct, and institutional governance while offering a groundbreaking theoretical contribution to film and heritage studies.

If calls for restitution challenge traditional film archival practices, film itself—used as an archival medium—complicates conventional notions of restitution. Moving beyond a limited view of restitution as simply “giving back,” the contributors to this volume envision a broader, decolonial horizon. They reassert historical demands for decolonial worldmaking that remain unfulfilled, proposing new political and ethical relationships between the unequal stakeholders of global film heritage.

This book is an essential resource for scholars in film and media history, feminist and decolonial theory, critical geography, and archival studies, as well as for curators, archivists, cultural practitioners, and general readers. It offers a vital perspective for anyone engaged in the ongoing work of decolonizing audiovisual archives.

chapter 1|44 pages

Film/Restitution

Title
Contesting Displacement, Enclosure and Uneven Relations of Care in Global Audiovisual Archiving
Size: 1.36 MB

part I|112 pages

With and Against the Colonial Archive

Title

chapter 2|18 pages

Footage Lost and Found

Title
A Roundtable on Africa's Displaced and Silenced Film Heritage
Size: 0.37 MB

chapter 3|25 pages

Six Scenes of (Dis)engagement

Title
Creating Friction in the Italian Fascist and Colonial Archives
Size: 1.30 MB

chapter 4|12 pages

Decolonizing the Colonial Film Archive

Title
Access to Ghana's Shared Cinematic Heritage
Size: 0.32 MB

chapter 5|13 pages

Scenes from the Archive

Title
Size: 0.57 MB

chapter 6|20 pages

Burning to Give Access

Title
Mapping, Repatriating and Sustaining Audiovisual Archives of the South African Liberation Struggle through the Visual History Explorer
Size: 1.27 MB

chapter 7|22 pages

Reactivating Ethnographic Image Collections

Title
Toward a Decolonial Archivology
Size: 2.90 MB

part II|82 pages

Institutions and Practices

Title

chapter 8|21 pages

A View from the North

Title
A Conversation on Global Audiovisual Archiving, Shared Heritage and Archival Cooperation
Size: 0.70 MB

chapter 9|23 pages

Restoring Ray

Title
On the Geo-Cultural Politics of “Saving Cinema”
Size: 2.36 MB

chapter 10|10 pages

Caring for Indigenous Audiovisual Heritage in Australia

Title
On Shared Archival Authority, Culturally Appropriate Protocols and Digital Returns
Size: 0.42 MB

chapter 11|15 pages

Institutional Memory and Archival Returns

Title
History of a Negotiated Transport of Films from the BFI to the National Archives of Trinidad and Tobago
Size: 2.36 MB

chapter 12|11 pages

African Cinema Returns

Title
Tracing Guinean Film Heritage in Eastern European Archives
Size: 1.05 MB

part III|78 pages

Rethinking Restitution, Widening the Circle

Title

chapter 13|20 pages

Questioning Return

Title
A Conversation on Decolonial Approaches toward Restitution, Repair and Care in Authoritarian (Post)colonial and Imperial Film Heritage and Cinema Cultures
Size: 1.02 MB

chapter 14|10 pages

Films That Don't Exist Do Exist

Title
Restituting a Missing Cinema
Size: 0.29 MB

chapter 15|23 pages

Restoration, Restitution and Potential History

Title
A Dialogue with Abdoul War on Med Hondo's Archive
Size: 3.60 MB

chapter 16|14 pages

Noli Me Tangere

Title
Contextualizing Moving Image Restitution in the Community-Based Archival Practice of Forum Lenteng and Otty Widasari
Size: 2.89 MB

chapter 17|9 pages

To Oralize or to Digitize?

Title
Re-Membering Nigeria's Contested Archives
Size: 1.04 MB